Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I went to business school in my thirties.
I didn't leave business school to go bankrupt.
I got more out of the farm than Harvard Business School.
I didn't go to a business school. I didn't really study it.
I've lectured at the Harvard Business School several times.
I guess when you go to business school you never turn business off.
I'd like to go to NYU business school and then go on to film school.
My most difficult class at Harvard Business School would have to be finance.
I went to Huddersfield University Business School. That's where I learned my trade.
Well... I graduated from the business school of Northumberland University in Newcastle.
I didn't go to business school, didn't care about financial stuff and the stock market.
I am a student of a business school in Delhi and went back for my final semester exams.
I spent five years running Manhattan GMAT helping young people get into business school.
The only thing you need to set up a business school is a warm body and a piece of chalk.
I went to business school, because I thought that's where you had to go if you wanted to get rich.
I find, in merchandising and design and creative, a business school degree isn't particularly helpful.
When I came back to India after Harvard Business School, I started as a lawyer and as a trade union leader.
Management teams aren't good at asking questions. In business school, we train them to be good at giving answers.
Let me tell you, very frankly, when I went to the Harvard Business School I was more or less a committed socialist.
In the United States we have the great Harvard Business School, but America is the country with the greatest debt in the world.
The main trouble with Hollywood is that the guys you have to pitch to, the guys who run the studios, are all business school grads.
Brand names are well known to business school professors, but only one professor is a brand name herself. Call her Professor Oprah.
I never went to business school. I was just bumbling through a lot of my life. I was like the guy behind the curtain in The Wizard of Oz.
We mislead ourselves when we pretend we can make someone into an effective manager by putting them through a few courses in business school.
I'm regularly speaking at London Business School and Harvard Business School. They're the next generation of leaders in the fashion industry.
You wouldn't want to be called a sell-out by selling a product. Selling out was frowned on, whereas now you can major in it at business school.
The problem is that many times people suspend their common sense because they get drowned in business models and Harvard business school teachings.
Which to this day is a source of enormous guilt, because I left with three classes to go in the business school to sign a contract with 20th Century Fox.
I never learned management. I never went to business school. I'm an artist. I happened to have really clear ideas of what I thought my business should be.
In order to produce generalist courses, business school professors have been forced to invent subjects called strategy, called organizational behavior and so on.
In high school, I worked at Abercrombie & Fitch, and once I graduated from business school at USC, I started a company with my partner and had a nine-to-seven job.
The way most people approach business - and the way they mostly teach in business school - involves the analytical mind. It divides it up and looks at parts in isolation.
Undergrad, for me, in college was really about, you know, how do I become a professional. But business school, for me, was how do I become the person that I'm meant to be.
Filmmaking in general is my second career. I thought that writing wasn't practical, so I went to business school and got an MBA, and I worked three years in grant management.
My background was computer science and business school, so eventually I worked my way up where I was running product groups - development, testing, marketing, user education.
I came to the U.S. in 1994 to learn English and go to business school, but I took only a few business courses at the State University of New York at Albany and didn't finish.
I think many people go to business school and learn ways to play it safe, ensuring that they avoid some of the pain that entrepreneurs endure while taking less calculated risks.
I didn't go to business school. I actually didn't even graduate high school. I ended up with a GED. So everything that I've learned in business, I've learned through experience.
It's pretty challenging in a small country to develop a business school with a world-class reputation because of the problem of attracting a critical mass of top-class researchers.
Isn't it interesting that markets are not just perfect? In business school and economic theory, you learn all about those perfect markets, and there's no such thing as a perfect market.
Very few, if any, first-generation black or white or Asian kids will pursue a Ph.D. They'll pursue the professions for economic security. Many will go to law school and/or business school.
I teach in the medical school, the School of Public Health, the Kennedy School of Government, and the Business School. And it's the best perch... because most of my work crosses boundaries.
I did film and television, not having worked in banking or consulting, a very different stream. So I said, 'I'll go to business school, and it will help me decide more on what I want to do.'
I was frustrated for a long time with my colleagues in the business school world and with so many management authors who didn't really see themselves as innovators. They were glorified journalists.
I wrote my first piece about the disruption of the Harvard Business School in 1999. Because you could see this coming. I haven't yet done the one about the disruption of the Stanford Business School.
Graduating business school, I had $150,000 of debt. An investment firm offered me a steady job, but it didn't feel right. It was 2007 in Silicon Valley, and I dreamed of starting an Internet company.
I was a writer for 'New York' magazine. I had been to business school, but what did I know? Still, everybody from the receptionists on up to the editor would ask me what they should do with their money.
My dad was the baby. When he was born they were already successful. They sent him to business school - he probably would have loved to have been a poet or a writer or something, and he was very creative.
If you go into business school and suggest firing a customer, they'll kick you out of the building. But it's so true in my experience. It allows you to identify the customers you really want to work with.
In 2007, I was living in San Francisco. I came out of business school, and I was very keen on doing something with a small company. I felt that the market, in general, in mobile phones was just going to explode.